The Conservatives have vowed to abolish business rates for high street shops and pubs should they secure victory in the upcoming general election.
Shadow Chancellor Sir Mel Stride made the commitment at the Conservative Party conference on Monday, arguing the “burden of Labourâs tax rises” had been “simply too much to bear” for many businesses.
Pledging to “get business rates down”, he said: “I can announce that as a direct result of getting public spending under control, a future Conservative government will completely abolish business rates for shops and pubs on our high street.” He added: “End of. Finished. Gone.”
The policy is expected to cost ÂŁ4 billion, with the Conservatives arguing it would help protect jobs, particularly for young people, at 250,000 businesses across the country.
Setting out what he called a âradical plan to rebuild our economyâ, he pledged that the Tories would âalways be thereâ for businesses.

Earlier in his speech, Sir Mel had set out plans to cut ÂŁ47 billion from public spending by restricting welfare payments, shrinking the Civil Service, and slashing aid spending.
The proposals would see people with âless severeâ mental health problems offered treatment rather than benefits, with Sir Mel saying this would help them to âa better lifeâ.
He also said a future Conservative government would make savings by restricting benefits to UK citizens, although during media interviews on Monday morning he admitted that EU nationals with settled status would also be eligible for welfare.
Earlier, he had told the BBC that foreign workers who were no longer eligible for benefits would have to go home or âwork longerâ.
But, apart from plans to scrap business rates and offer a ÂŁ5,000 national insurance rebate for people getting their first full-time job, he played down the prospect of further swingeing tax cuts.
Arguing that rising national debt meant he could not âsimply say we will use all of those savings to spend more elsewhere, or to cut taxesâ, he promised to only cut taxes âwhen it is affordableâ.

He added: âBecause we know where the alternative path leads.
âWe saw that with a mini budget in 2022, so let me be clear: the Conservative Party will never, ever make fiscal commitments without spelling out exactly how they will be paid for.â
As well as cutting welfare, Sir Mel said a future Tory government would reduce the Civil Service back to its 2016 size and cut aid spending to 0.1% of national income.
The pledge to cut aid spending has prompted an outcry from development organisations, with Romilly Greenhill, chief executive of aid coalition Bond, saying it would be âan epic act of self-harmâ.
Speaking to the PA news agency, Sir Mel said the party would look at âall areas of governmentâ to make savings.
But he insisted the Conservatives remained âfirmly committedâ to the pensions triple lock, following comments from the Institute for Economic Affairs think tank arguing that rising age-related costs was the âelephant in the roomâ when it came to public spending.
Asked if the spending cuts proposed on Monday were necessary to pay for the triple lock, Sir Mel told PA: âYou have to make savings in order to get the debt down, in order to get taxes down, and in order to fund spending in other areas, and everything has to add up in a fiscally responsible manner.â